Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s nomination for US health secretary advances with crucial Republican support, despite controversy over ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made clear in testimony before the Senate this week that if confirmed as Health and Human Services secretary, his focus would be on chronic diseases over infectious ones.
Kennedy Jr. appear to be on shaky ground ... Cassidy effectively said he’d support Kennedy if the HHS nominee acknowledged the simple fact that vaccines didn’t cause autism.
The Maryland Democrat called out Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s false claim that Black people have "better" immune systems than white people. By Ja'han Jones Sen. Angela Alsobrooks, the first Black U.S ...
Now that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s two confirmation hearings have concluded on Capitol Hill, we have clear evidence that he is unfit to lead our nation’s largest health agency. Throughout the ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced an intense three hours of questioning in his second day of hearings to convince senators to back him as Health and Human Services ...
Kennedy Jr. about controversial comments they said he had made in the past. And over and over, President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of health and human services either denied having ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. accused Sen. Bernie Sanders of being in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry during a tense exchange at his Health and Human Services confirmation hearing Thursday, Sky News ...
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., President Donald Trump's nominee to serve as Secretary of Health and Human Services, testifies during a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing ...
Kennedy had a simple answer in response ... ranchers across this country," Kennedy said. RFK Jr. struggles to answer whether he stands by past statements that HPV vaccine increases the risk ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. spent two days this week insisting to senators that he’s not anti-vaccine. He said that he instead supports vaccinations and will follow the science in overseeing the $1.7 ...
WASHINGTON — Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., cast doubt Thursday over whether Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is qualified to be the next leader of the government’s largest and most powerful health agency.